A recent New York
Times commentator reminded me recently of the “cafeteria” approach as
applied to religion, a not uncommon behavior by which sincere “True Believers”
select which parts of their religious precepts they will adhere to and which
parts they will deliberately overlook.
The Times commentator
was sadly distressed specifically by the number of her co-religionists who
supported a certain presidential candidate, abandoning in the process their
faith’s bedrock beliefs concerning “welcoming the stranger” and the charitable
caring for the least of us.
As with all institutional erosions, it appears that
religions inevitably develop a “cafeteria” component so as to remain sufficiently
meaningful to the lives of their constituents. My earliest personal example was encountering Jews of my acquaintance
proclaiming,
“We only eat pork out.”
Thus parsing, although I am unaware it is written anywhere
that doing so is permissible, strict Jewish dietary proscriptions on the basis
of whether you eat “the other white meat” as it was once promoted at home – strictly forbidden – or whether it
is brought to your restaurant table by a waiter – which is apparently okay. Though they might prefer, if at all possible,
a Jewish waiter.
“Cafeteria” religious people: “All” was not working for them; “nothing” was
spiritually unacceptable, as the “cafeteria” contingent remained substantially
true to of their religious beliefs, setting aside the beliefs they had decided
to ignore.
I totally get it.
(Although, theoretically, I favor the crystal clarity of consistency. But, as many Great Thinkers before me have
said, “Who cares?”)
I myself, who in my later years, chose to eschew eating bread
during the Eight Days of Passover found myself recently partaking of gluten-free
matza (the bread substitute) here it says right on the box “Not Appropriate for Passover” but I ate
it anyway, valuing medical prescription over liturgical rigorosity.
“Let him who is without sin cast the first cracker
crumb.”
… is what I say.
Bringing me seamlessly to the next rung in my logical
ladder:
When science (arguably) surpassed religion.
In recent times – by which I mean the last five hundred or
so years – science has replaced religion the way football in America has
replaced baseball. People still follow baseball,
but football has supplanted it as the defining ethos of the day.
If that’s not too confusing an analogy.
This preferential determination is hardly an either/or
situation – you can accommodate both – football/baseball, religion/science, and
many folks do. But undeniably, advancing into modernity it
became increasingly popular to ground your faith in observable reality rather
than grounding your faith in… just faith.
Although I will quickly include a current resonating quotation,
“The consolation of imaginary things is not imaginary consolation.”
Still, today is not about that.
Today is, finally, about this.
Contemporary society has developed an unwavering belief that
“The Scientific Method” is the path to unshakable certainty – not right way
away, maybe, but through assiduous self-correction until the ultimate answer
is verifiably achieved – the triumphant cure for polio, for example. However, even some of the most ardent adherents
to the scientific philosophy…
“Cafeteria-style”…
as with the distinguishing restaurant pork-eaters, there are
certain scientifically certain beliefs that otherwise overwhelming supporters
of the scientific slide vociferously dismiss.
Such as?
Childhood immunization, for example.
“Sorry, not for us.”
The New Yorker’s
Jerome Groopman reviewing a book entitled, “The Case Against Sugar”,
concluding, after serious investigation involving expert consultation,
“Eat and exercise in
moderation; maintain a diet consisting of balanced amounts of protein, fat, and
carbohydrates; make sure you get plenty of fruits and vegetables. And enjoy an occasional slice of chocolate
cake.”
“‘No, thanks. We’re
sticking with our diets.”
The scientific determination that, due to the effect of
testosterone during the prenatal period, men’s and women’s brains develop detectably
differently.
“Yeah, our money’s on everything’s the same; the differences
are all cultural.”
And perhaps the most disturbing example, wherein, I was
recently informed, highly reputable
medical journal recently announced that
Getting cancer is random.
“NO!”
Cancer is random?
That means anyone can get
it. And by the way, there is no way of
avoiding “Random.”
“We are definitely passing on that one.”
But it’s verifiable science.
“We don’t care!”
Okay, getting cancer’s not
random.
“Thank you. I mean,
what the hell were they thinking!”
We all like freedom, don’t we? Well that’s all that this is. We don’t like what we don’t like, be it in
the religious arena or the scientific, so we independently picks and chooses and
that’s just the way it’s going to be!
Fine.
Until we peer curiously behind the curtain to discover that
“The All Knowing Wizard of Certainty”…
… is us.
And perhaps quietly wonder if that will ultimately suffice.
I find it odd that many of those who choose to believe in a higher power, believe that the higher power is interested in diet and clothing. Hey, I can't stop you guys from killing each other but maybe you'll listen to me on this food thing. And it's important that my representatives wear funny hats and cloaks or capes.
ReplyDeleteLife is both random and absurd.